NE OSHAWA DALY. TIMES, THURSDAY, AUGUST 6, 1931 1' Snowden, i Grove, Aug. S--Aftendance School was not quite as usual on Sadar, & the ervice ou, Eos. EHrson, Obs sang 'a greet Freer over the. week-en helm a pits Jem to St. Catharines a. a Cs il Luke, Osh- 3 an 1 # +. and Mrs. Noble Rev. EW RS Selby, is ing his holidays wit i Mrs. 2. Penis & Toronto, has Thee visiting relatives i in this del Th D. H. Coates and son, Dr, Coates, Brantford, visited at irls' league game of softball was ped on our grounds between npton team and the home team. Was a very snappy game om ac- of the fielding of both +Qur girls succeeded in get v six ls while they kept their opponents from gaining. a run. 'i. Rev. and Mrs, Wolfraim, Helen id Harry are leaving this week to "spend their holidays in Muskoka. Mr.Sheene of the Ontario Prohi- ition: Union, Toronto, will 'eccuny ithe pulpit here next Sunday: *. Mrs. F. Swallow is spending a few adays with relatives-in Toronto. i A number from here enjoyed the excursion to Port Dalhousie on 'Wednesday. firs and Mrs. E, R. Fréeman and fs. Harry Freeman visited rela- es in Peterborough on Monday. : Mr, Lloyd Metcalf s on of last week with and Mrs. _#& Cyril Luke, Oshawa. © #3: Miss Evelyn Gay, Oshawa, has wisiting* her uncle and 'aunt, $9Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Snowden. Miss Laura' Thompson, Toronto, J8upent 'the week-end at' Mr. 'A ' paid'. We rs. Winan; Winnipeg, has been iting hér cousin, Mrs. J.'D. Stev- On Monday, August 3td, our girls Lm layed another league game of soft- ; Il with Courtice girls at Courtice. ye. Courtice girls again defeated girls, ; rag Po Molly Hynds, Toronto, spent |. Dsadew days with. Miss Helen Metcalf. Thornton's oon PY Aug, 5.-- ~The Westmount Cub Pack arrived home on Saturday from a week's camping at the Kiwanis Camp. Al! ~ report a jolly time and regretted t the camp ended so soon. e many friends of Mrs, Wm. mith, 'who has been staying with jer cousin, rs, I. Huggins for sev- 1 weeks, will be glad to hear her - great 'improvement gfter : Sudden serious illness of last . Mrs. Smith is in the Osh- o8pital Mrs. E. Pascoe has returned m & two weeks' visit with her other in Detroit. Her son, Elf, her, Mr. George Booth and rs. Booth returned with her for a few days' visit. ~ "Morris Robinson yas in Toron- ; fhe Maren Be ico a pnd Aude : C} ses Bern . and Audrey 2 Sul :8uests of uncle, i Robe and. zs. : 4 Mr. and s. N n Buss snd . Walter Buss were in Toronto, re- "HE gn s ces. 0! inson is spend. yosk in £3 1 Courtice with Mr, and Mrs. W. L. Pierson are 'week's motor trip through 'estern Ontario. asters Jack arden Pier- | r grand- d Mrs, E. Hy oy Harold Pierson Florence Garrard Edna Reeson have returned na qeliglttal two weeks' mo- wn «to "Atlantic City, 3 arents, Mr. Mr. and ent a few, Mr. tains. The dump Lewis London.--After a s several months, one dumps of explosives of gece was discovered ++ [and blown up in the Dublin Moun- Killakee in a concrete chamber cut into the overhanging. bank of a stream, In it were rifles, revolvers, guns rounds of ammunition, a large quan- Civic Guard officers, and the + rioise He explosion was heard in Dub- ; jmportant, even taht the of tary stores th were yd in the dump were he an An un of the statue of King. William, which. was . blown. in. College | so 4 Green in oe Td will be remembere red mh see lege student neat the Hell Fire Club, six weeks ago, a hill fortress was es- Hamar in Killakee Castle on 1.08 on as: emesne, in, the taciivitios of the. bog l "mili organization that was conducting target s every week in the moun! This fortress was man- ned by a large force of special de- tectives, under . Inspector Mooney, and was fully equipped and fortified against surprise attack. Tasti he Disses years by the: rds | t 'was discovered near and thousands of 4 "Lunch-- a most im- ortant meal or salesmen" "When you're on the go all day long, the food you eat for lunch must be chosen with care. Don't eat heavy foods that make you warm and slow you down in mid - afternoon. Eat nourishing foods--of course -- but don't over load. I usually order Shredded Wheat with berries or other fresh fruits for lunch. There SHREDDED WHEAT WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT drilling operations and |an It has Thish Doni hd the head quarters of illegal Th oat The head. Te iin Fg ie were the ire ne ot win and one' of Ine rpgses To this special branch of the Du blin Detective Division was to locate and destroy these head- uarters. A clie'to the situation of is dump was given by the fact that on on varias occasions men who were ie. to be concerned with illegal sive es been seen round and ng thigh gh boots, and, therfore wk as presumed that the dump en away near the ihe be i a river. dump was virtually within sight of Killakee Castle, but it was cleverly "concealed that it re- mained undiscovered, and it was stumbled on more or less by chance. It was fortunate that the suspicions of the detectives were aroused, and that they found the trap mine that Lord guarded this dump before any dam- age was done. P y Wires Before the dump y ld be Siathol expert had to be in' to sever the wires that led to the trap mine. Great care was ss necessary in gaining entrance to the dump; for it contained a great quan- <4 of explosives, hot to men- tion military munitions. The entrance to the dump was an ingeniously contrived stone door, about four feet square, covered with ivy and tendrils, It was in a place frequented "by Boy Scouts and tourists, and any person at any time come in con- tact with the trap mine they would have been blown to pieces. The dump was on the banks of a Lsmall river flowing through the innocent situation was the real rea- son for its remaining undiscovered up to the present. The dump itself was a chamber about 20 feet square, clean and white-washed inside, containing, in addition to the military stores, a tent, bedding for several men, and a good supply of tinned foodstuffs. It had been used quite recently, and everything wi in perfect condition. The military stores found i in it in- cluded : ly rifles, hundreds of thousands of rounds of ammunidon of all kinds, about 50 revolvers and German automatic pistols, several Lewis machine-guns, and a large quantity of high explosive. The "dump" was first discovered in the early morning, it was the afternoon before entrance was ef- fected. Then members of the head- quarters staff of he C Civie Guard, including General n O'Duffy, Commissioner ; on Neligan, Chief of the Detective Department for the Free State; Chief Superin- tendent Brennan and Superintend- ent Ennis visited the scene, and it was decided that the dump should be blown up, as it would have been dangerous to remove the large quan- tities that were lying about. After the small arms and the secret documents were removed, the plosion, between 7.30 and 8 Ti was so great that it was hear all over the countryside, and in Dublin City. . Men standing 300 yards away were knocked to the ground by the force of the explosion. Much Better Jennie was deep in letter-writ- ing when her best friend came in. "Letter? quoth the latter, "how ° old-fashioned! To your mother? Why don't you telephone her?' She'll like it lots better!" 'Jennie appreciated that advice, and so did her mother. "You ought to, typewrite your poetry, you know.' "My goodness, if I were clever enough to do typewriting, do you think I would be wasting my time on poetry?" ou Log the A Alleghany again Vi Frank 'Le Roy, | nice and Jack were in Toronto, a Sunday. a" Re r. and rs. 1 nily, of Tor Pov end and * holiday guests of Mrs. artin's sister, Mrs. Arthur Pier. and family. Fr guests of their daughter, e Webster and Mr. + and.;Mrs. George Pierson : y as guests for 'holiday. : g | + A. Scott and Walter were in Toronto, on Sunday. § 3 a Pi lerson is 1 Gode- nis Sh | il SD here NIC ION die Bd Massey demesne, and its natgral and |: whole dump was blown up. The ex- | | RUINED CITY IN "KAUAHARI DESERT Patches as Big as France Still Utterly Un- known Great was the astonishment of pioneers trekking through the thick bush in Mashonaland when 'masonry they came suddenly upon a mass ruined walls were forty feet high and sixteen feet thick, This was Zimbabwe, which many people believe to have been the cap of that Ophir from which Ki Solomon drew his -vast supplies of gold and ivory. Now comes news that another ruined city has. been discovered amid the sands of the waterless Kalahart Desert and that Plet Grobler, Minister of Lands in the izing an expedition to explore this place of mystery. From the accounts given by bushmen to the Minister, this city is actually larger than Zimbabwe, and the stones of which it is composed are of huge stone buildings whose | g | with snakes, Union of South Africa, is organ-| writer of this article in London "top tha 'eople. will tell you t we know all about the surface of our planet--that ere. i8 nothing left to explore. n't believe them. In Brazil alone there are patches as big as France which are still utterly unknown, In the Rio Museum is stéred a manuseript 'in Portuguese con- cerning a vast ruined city which lies in: the nigh country of the great province of Bahia and which the writer of the account visited about 160 years ago. It is lof great bBo and buflt of massive t has bean ruined by a Tag" earthquake. It stands on a tableland sur- rounded on all sides by scrub so thick that the Only way of cross- ing It is to creep along the old dry river beds, which swarm The city is built round a great central square, in the middle of which is the statue on a rock pedestal' with one arm' outstretched, the hand pointing due north Tunnel Many attempts' have been made to revisit this strange relic of a long-forgotten civilization, but all without effect. Scores of lives bave been lost in these vain ef- forts. , There is said to be another lost of colossal size, ' recounts the city in the same district, This, ac- of a man of great size, standing] BOVR T 3 : | AND WI se Or butter and cording to the Indians, les in a deep . hollow----probably an old volcanic crater--surrounded by lofty eliffs, and can be approach ed by a secret tunnel," * The In&ans declare that this place still have people living in it. There is talk of exploring this country by aeroplane, but 'the distances are so vast and Janding- places so rare that it will be a long time before anything of the '| sort can be attempted. Oddly enough, a crater city exists in Japan. No fewer than 2,000 people live and prosper in the interior of the 'extinct crater called Aso Sau, Vertical walls 800 feet high surround this eur fous colony. If you. read the story: of Dr. Thomas Gann's explorations in Central America you" will*realize that the jungles of Yucatan, Hon- duras, and Nicaragua hide a maze § - Stor ith am ancient cities which, owing to J some strange change of climate, § were deserted ' by. their 'people hundreds of years 2g0o. One of these cities, which Dr. Génn' ex- plored, must have held a, pophila- tion of. at least a aparer: of a million. Mr, Hansford, a Melbotirhie man | who has explored largely in Northern Queensland, back a story of a hitherto un- brought [8s known colony of Chinamen in the | little-known country on the shores of the Gulf of Carpentaria. | pr -- "TE RC |) Jog LI "where Quality Counts" Ih} TORLES .IMITED These Special Values Are Effective August 6-7-8th THIS WEEK'S OUTSTANDING VALUE!! I) circles) CHILI Saniflash ......... Jello--Asst. Flavors. 'Brunswick Sardines Gillett's Lye ...... Gold Soap ........ Vitone ....co0vvss Crisco ........vu 0 Non-Chip Tumblers Oxydol .......... Small ........;.. "Medium ...ii00en Large ...cccivnee v BORDEN'S Evaporated IT'S PURE IT'S ECONOMICAL H.P. Sauce .....0vs. Bayside Tomatoes '§5°..2 tr 23c FRUIT JARS Certo Shrimps - mp APPLE SAUCE -- Oshawa Grown CHARLES MILK -10° "Tasty' Bread Apricots EXTRA CHOICE QUALITY AUSTRALIAN SAUC SALMON "Mayfield" Bacon su.» 25. . ma 20¢ Bottle 27¢ 2 mp. 23¢ . Ta 6c . T™ Je .10 ®n 39¢ 1p. Tn 53¢ 1b. Tm fe 39¢ 21c Carton eve of 8 Lge. 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